450 research outputs found
What can polysemy tell us about theories of explanation?
Philosophical accounts of scientific explanation are broadly divided into ontic and epistemic views. This paper explores the idea that the lexical ambiguity of the verb to explain and its nominalisation supports an ontic conception of explanation. I analyse one argument which challenges this strategy by criticising the claim that explanatory talk is lexically ambiguous, 375–394, 2012). I propose that the linguistic mechanism of transfer of meaning, 109–132, 1995) provides a better account of the lexical alternations that figure in the systematic polysemy of explanatory talk, and evaluate the implications of this proposal for the debate between ontic and epistemic conceptions of scientific explanation
Generating multimedia presentations: from plain text to screenplay
In many Natural Language Generation (NLG) applications, the output is limited to plain text – i.e., a string of words with punctuation and paragraph breaks, but no indications for layout, or pictures, or dialogue. In several projects, we have begun to explore NLG applications in which these extra media are brought into play. This paper gives an informal account of what we have learned. For coherence, we focus on the domain of patient information leaflets, and follow an example in which the same content is expressed first in plain text, then in formatted text, then in text with pictures, and finally in a dialogue script that can be performed by two animated agents. We show how the same meaning can be mapped to realisation patterns in different media, and how the expanded options for expressing meaning are related to the perceived style and tone of the presentation. Throughout, we stress that the extra media are not simple added to plain text, but integrated with it: thus the use of formatting, or pictures, or dialogue, may require radical rewording of the text itself
Baryon spectra with instanton induced forces
Except the vibrational excitations of and mesons, the main features
of spectra of mesons composed of quarks , , and can be quite well
described by a semirelativistic potential model including instanton induced
forces. The spectra of baryons composed of the same quarks is studied using the
same model. The results and the limitations of this approach are described.
Some possible improvements are suggested.Comment: 5 figure
Can minimalism about truth embrace polysemy?
Paul Horwich is aware of the fact that his theory as stated in his works is directly applicable only to a language in which a word, understood as a syntactic type, is connected with exactly one literal meaning. Yet he claims that the theory is expandable to include homonymy and indexicality and thus may be considered as applicable to natural language. My concern in this paper is with yet another kind of ambiguity - systematic polysemy - that assigns multiple meanings to one linguistic type. I want to combine the characteristics of systematic polysemy with the Kaplanian insight that meanings of expressions may be defined by semantic rules which assign content in context and to ask the question if minimalism about truth and meaning is compatible with such rule-based systematic polysemy. I will first explain why the expressions that exhibit rule-based systematic polysemy are difficult to combine with a truth theory that is based on a use theory of meaning before proceeding to argue that indexicals and proper names are such expressions
The Web will kill them all: new media, digital utopia, and political struggle in the Italian 5-Star Movement
This article examines the role of discourses about
new media technology and the Web in the
rise of the 5-Star Movement (Movimento 5 Stelle, or
M5S) in Italy. Founded by comedian and
activist Beppe Grillo and Web entrepreneur Gianrobe
rto Casaleggio in 2009, this movement
succeeded in becoming the second largest party at t
he 2013 national elections in Italy. This
article aims to discuss how elements of digital uto
pia and Web-centric discourses have been
inserted into the movement’s political message, and
how the construction of the Web as a myth
has shaped the movement’s discourse and political p
ractice. The 5-Star Movement is compared
and contrasted with other social and political move
ments in Western countries which have
displayed a similar emphasis on new media, such as
the Occupy movement, the Indignados
movement, and the Pirate Parties in Sweden and Germ
any. By adopting and mutating cyber-
utopian discourses from the so-called Californian i
deology, the movement symbolically identifies
itself with the Web. The traditional political esta
blishment is associated with “old” media
(television, radio, and the printed press), and rep
resented as a “walking dead,” doomed to be
superseded and buried by a Web-based direct democra
cy
Genealogies of Slavery
This chapter addresses the concept of slavery, exploring its character and significance as a dark page in history, but also as a specifically criminological and zemiological problem, in the context of international law and human rights. By tracing the ambiguities of slavery in international law and international development, the harms associated with slavery are considered. Harms include both those statutorily proscribed, and those that are not, but that can still be regarded as socially destructive. Traditionally, antislavery has been considered within the parameters of abolition and criminalization. In this context recently, anti-trafficking has emerged as a key issue in contemporary anti-slavery work. While valuable, anti-trafficking is shown to have significant limitations. It advances criminalization and stigmatization of the most vulnerable and further perpetuates harm. At the same time, it identifies structural conditions like poverty, vulnerability, and “unfreedom” of movement only to put them aside. Linked to exploitation, violence and zemia, the chapter brings to the fore some crucial questions concerning the prospects of systemic theory in the investigation of slavery, that highlight the root causes of slavery, primarily poverty and inequality. Therefore, the chapter counterposes an alternative approach in which the orienting target is not abolition of slavery but advancing structural changes against social harm
Slurs, neutral counterparts, and what you could have said
Analytic Philosophy, Volume 62, Issue 4, Page 359-375, December 2021
E-readers and the death of the book: or, new media and the myth of the disappearing medium
The recent emergence of e-readers and e-books has b
rought the death of the book to the centre of
current debates on new media. In this article, we a
nalyse alternative narratives that surround the
possibility of the disappearance of print books, do
minated by fetishism, fears about the end of
humanism, and ideas of techno-fundamentalist progre
ss. We argue that, in order to comprehend
such narratives, we need to inscribe them in the br
oader history of media. The emergence of new
media, in fact, has often been accompanied by narra
tives about the possible disappearance of
older media: the introduction of television, for in
stance, inspired claims about the forthcoming
death of film and radio. As a recurrent narrative s
haping the reception of media innovation, the
myth of the disappearing medium helps us to make se
nse of the transformations that media
change provokes in our everyday life
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